mahussain3
Son of Aa'ishah(R.A)
Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah Bin Abdul Aziz is alive and rumours of his death are untrue, a Saudi-based source told Reuters.
"The rumours aren't true," said the source, an adviser to a senior member of the Saudi ruling family.
Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah bin Abdul-Aziz is alive and in "excellent shape," its foreign minister said on Thursday after rumors about the king's health triggered a spike in the price of oil.
Abdullah, around 87, has been resting in Morocco since January following a two-month stay in the United States where he underwent surgery twice after a blood clot complicated a slipped disc, state media have said.
"I'd like to reassure you about the health of the king. He is in excellent shape. He is undergoing therapy as you know. Doctors are suggesting a certain amount of therapy," Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal said.
"He is doing twice as much. They are suggesting a certain time for therapy. He is looking to cut it in half," he added.
The foreign minister was speaking in Morocco, which he visited on Thursday while postponing a planned visit to Algeria.
A Saudi foreign ministry official said the Algeria visit was put off due to unspecified commitments in Morocco. Algeria's foreign ministry said it was for "personal reasons" that concerned Prince Saud.
An adviser to a senior member of the ruling family also said Rumors of the king's death were false. Two Gulf-based diplomats said they were unaware of changes to the king's health.
North Sea Brent crude oil futures for March had jumped to a high of $102.88 per barrel, their highest for a week on the Rumors about the health of the leader of the world's biggest oil exporter. Prices later slipped back to around $101.60 by 1410 GMT as traders discounted the Rumors.
The cost of insuring exposure to Saudi Arabian sovereign obligations for five years also spiked by 19 basis points from the previous day's close.
The White House said US President Barack Obama had spoken to Abdullah on Wednesday about the political situation in Egypt, where unrest threatens to bring down Egypt's longtime leader.
As home to Islam's holiest sites, as well as the birthplace of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, Saudi Arabia is central to global efforts to fight Islamic militancy.
Riyadh has been keen to show its allies there will be no power vacuum as health problems affect its octogenarian rulers. Since the death of the state's founder King Abdul-Aziz in 1953, the country has been ruled only by his sons.
A frail Crown Prince Sultan, another son of Abdul-Aziz who also had been away for unspecified treatment for much of the past two years, has returned to run the kingdom in Abdullah's absence.
With both Abdullah and Sultan in their 80s, speculation has arisen that Interior Minister Prince Nayef, 76 and a conservative, could take over in the future.
---Agencies
"The rumours aren't true," said the source, an adviser to a senior member of the Saudi ruling family.
Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah bin Abdul-Aziz is alive and in "excellent shape," its foreign minister said on Thursday after rumors about the king's health triggered a spike in the price of oil.
Abdullah, around 87, has been resting in Morocco since January following a two-month stay in the United States where he underwent surgery twice after a blood clot complicated a slipped disc, state media have said.
"I'd like to reassure you about the health of the king. He is in excellent shape. He is undergoing therapy as you know. Doctors are suggesting a certain amount of therapy," Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal said.
"He is doing twice as much. They are suggesting a certain time for therapy. He is looking to cut it in half," he added.
The foreign minister was speaking in Morocco, which he visited on Thursday while postponing a planned visit to Algeria.
A Saudi foreign ministry official said the Algeria visit was put off due to unspecified commitments in Morocco. Algeria's foreign ministry said it was for "personal reasons" that concerned Prince Saud.
An adviser to a senior member of the ruling family also said Rumors of the king's death were false. Two Gulf-based diplomats said they were unaware of changes to the king's health.
North Sea Brent crude oil futures for March had jumped to a high of $102.88 per barrel, their highest for a week on the Rumors about the health of the leader of the world's biggest oil exporter. Prices later slipped back to around $101.60 by 1410 GMT as traders discounted the Rumors.
The cost of insuring exposure to Saudi Arabian sovereign obligations for five years also spiked by 19 basis points from the previous day's close.
The White House said US President Barack Obama had spoken to Abdullah on Wednesday about the political situation in Egypt, where unrest threatens to bring down Egypt's longtime leader.
As home to Islam's holiest sites, as well as the birthplace of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, Saudi Arabia is central to global efforts to fight Islamic militancy.
Riyadh has been keen to show its allies there will be no power vacuum as health problems affect its octogenarian rulers. Since the death of the state's founder King Abdul-Aziz in 1953, the country has been ruled only by his sons.
A frail Crown Prince Sultan, another son of Abdul-Aziz who also had been away for unspecified treatment for much of the past two years, has returned to run the kingdom in Abdullah's absence.
With both Abdullah and Sultan in their 80s, speculation has arisen that Interior Minister Prince Nayef, 76 and a conservative, could take over in the future.
---Agencies